I almost exposed her.
But something about that look Grandma gave me stopped me.
Forty-eight hours after her time of death, the doorbell rang.
Inside was a velvet pouch.
Courier. Signature required. Here I realized it was Grandma’s PLAN.
Linda smirked. “Mother always loved me best,” she whispered, hugging the box to her chest.
She tore it open in the living room with all of us watching.
Inside was a velvet pouch.
And a letter.
“No, Mom… that’s cruel.”
She read the first line.
Her face drained of color instantly.
Her hands started shaking.
The letter slipped from her fingers.
“No!!” she gasped. “No, Mom… that’s cruel. How could you do THIS to me?
“It says open in front of everyone.”
I stepped in. “Read it.”
Linda snatched it up. “It’s private.”
My mom didn’t move. “It says open in front of everyone.”
Uncle Ray leaned forward. “Out loud, Linda.”
Linda’s eyes shot to me, then back to the page like she could burn it with her stare.
“I did not want Kate blamed for telling the truth.”
She started, voice thin. “Linda… if you are holding this, it means you did exactly what I knew you would do.”
Nobody breathed.
Linda swallowed. “I saw you take my ring in hospice. I chose not to stop you. I did not want a fight at my bedside. But I also did not want Kate blamed for telling the truth.”
My stomach flipped hearing my name.
“You’re kidding.”
Linda read faster, panicked. “I sold the real diamond 10 years ago.”
Of course this caused a stir. No one had known about this before the letter.
I reached into the box and pulled out the receipt. Pawn shop. Date. Amount.
Ray’s face went hard. “You’re kidding.”
“You stole from her while she was dying.”
Linda kept going, voice cracking. “I paid for your rehab. You called me crying. You promised you were ready to change.”
My mom whispered, “She sold her diamond for you.”
Linda snapped, “I didn’t ask her to!”
“Yes, you did,” I said.
Linda whirled. “Shut up.”
Linda’s jaw trembled.
“No,” I said. “You stole from her while she was dying.”
Linda’s eyes flashed. “It was mine anyway!”
My mom’s voice cut like a knife. “Stop saying that.”
Linda’s jaw trembled. She looked around for backup and found none.
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